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‘His work covered four main themes: painting, architecture, the elements of mechanics, and human anatomy.’

‘It's called ‘Close to the Bone’ and claims to provide a blend of cooking, surgery, and lessons in human anatomy.’

‘He visited the zoo in Berlin several times and from 1907 to 1910 earned a good part of his living by teaching animal anatomy to artists.’

‘He also left extensive studies of human anatomy based on dissection of animals and anatomical writings of others.’

1.1The bodily structure of an organism.

‘descriptions of the cat's anatomy and behavior’

‘But the overriding theme served to elucidate his orientation to engineering principles based on human and animal anatomy.’

‘But we've got some concerns that those programs, because they use artificial conditions, may result in animals with sub optimal behaviours and physiologies and anatomies and so on that may actually not help the survival.’

‘Many orthopedic conditions, just like dimples or cleft chins, are just normal variations of human anatomy that don't require treatment.’

‘It is because this book has something important to say to ‘normates’ about their own lives, as well as about the lives of conjoined twins, that it stands a real chance of changing how we think about those with atypical anatomies.’

‘The Louvre has sent a tiny St George that shows how dodgy was his early grasp of animal and human anatomy.’

‘I'm more concerned with the fact that human and duck anatomy is so gosh darn similar.’

‘Farm animals are valuable models for normal human anatomy and physiology and for many disease states.’

‘And even though you pretend to be rough and tough, nobody likes to see themselves referred to as nether parts of human or animal anatomy.’

‘Mice and humans share much anatomy, biochemistry, physiology, and pharmacology, but there are some major differences.’

‘Natural Born Heroes also reveals how the anatomy of the human face is unique in the animal kingdom and can show an extraordinary range of emotions.’

‘He provided the groundwork for the session by reviewing the cranial and spinal anatomy and nerve structure and the neurological assessment.’

‘As a result, I decided to redefine certain parts of the anatomy based on their various functions they provide.’

‘Hedera blanched and scrambled to her feet, far more alert than her parents, who were rubbing whatever parts of their anatomies had been injured in the tip of the boat.’

‘‘Secrets my foot,’ growled Old Tom, although he mentioned a different part of the anatomy.’

‘Pains in other parts of the anatomy also come to mind whenever I think about him.’

‘The word also means that rude gesture with the fist clenched and lower arm raised mimicking another part of the anatomy.’

‘Speaking about aches in southern regions of the anatomy, what about Becks's female counterpart, the tennis impostor Anna Kournikova?’

‘Jonathan came over, and taking her hand, lightly touched his lips to that gloved part of the anatomy.’

‘While there was plenty of enjoyment on the trip there was also plenty of hardship and tales of aching legs and other parts of the anatomy.’

‘These pumped-up strongmen show off the peaks and valleys of their anatomies, exaggerated by both their extreme physical condition and the intense lighting that reflected off their oiled-up, leathery hides.’

‘Do parts of the anatomy grow and shape-shift in the night as you sleep?’

‘What other part of the anatomy can I show that is going to top that?’

‘Blood, guts, gore, young men in the prime of life having vital parts of their anatomies blown off: it was the grimmest slab of celluloid I have ever paid money to see.’

‘We then moved on to a series of movements, including touching toes, heels, knees or any other part of the anatomy you could reach, as we bounced.’

‘This suggests that a milkshake is a process, and not a bus, or indeed a part of the anatomy.’

‘Instead of his head, Jack has a different part of his anatomy patched up with vinegar and brown paper.’

‘I hate to state the obvious, but ‘curves’ can apply to various parts of the anatomy, not just the chest.’

‘He has picked up the latest version of the anatomy of GAA positions, but I have only room left to deal with the first line of defence this week.’

‘This is not an anatomy of his murder, nor the autopsy of a black man lynched by three young white males, but more an evocation of how this event fits in to a landscape and climate as much mental as physical.’

‘Whether it's blunt trauma wounds, the path of a bullet or the anatomy of a fight, we see it all.’

‘Although several books have been produced recently on sectional anatomy, none appear to be intended as detailed, comprehensive anatomies.’

‘Hello and welcome to the anatomy of democracy, the perils of democracy and the truth about democracy.’

‘A detailed anatomy of misordered situations shows that deviations from the true order in such cases are due mainly to interchanges of adjacent markers.’

‘The real value in his account, however, is in its detailed anatomy of failed institutional leadership.’

‘For much of Bénabou's writing can be read as an anatomy of reading; and looming at the center thereof is the search for the ideal Reader.’

‘Films about films are no great novelty in the DVD age, but Lost in La Mancha is a rarity: an anatomy of a film that never was.’

‘Whatever the motive, federal misfeasance is getting the blame in many media anatomies of the catastrophe.’

‘The process of desire is manifested in movement form, and becomes a rhythm ‘like an anatomy of the ebb and flow of wanting.’’

‘While this book effectively illustrates the history of terrorism, it is less successful in its claim to offer an anatomy of the phenomenon, although it does try hard.’

‘On their own, these arguments contribute to the anatomy of urban tribes begun in the first section of the book.’

‘In his letter yesterday, Mr Espinal, described a lengthy anatomy of his service collapse, and took readers through the layers of technical foul-ups.’

‘These two cases, in the context of the changing face of Detroit, present an anatomy of the white-ifying of hip-hop.’

‘The most convenient or tractable mathematical solutions were used for anatomies or different classes of structures.’

‘As Greig put it: ‘The play's roots were not in the bloodbaths of post-modern cinema, but in the Shakespearean anatomies of reduced men: Lear on the heath and Timon in his cave.’’

‘In the period since Tony Blair took office in May 1997, anatomies of Britain have been tumbling from the presses in dizzying profusion.’

‘Webster employs this episode in a final analysis of the anatomy of contemporary New Zealand anthropology and Maori studies.’

‘Neill refuses to wonder but instead conducts an anatomy of the anecdote's historical conditions through the opening.’